This morning's post takes its title from an old Scots name for the aurora borealis. Clear, cold winter nights are the best times for watching the grandest light show of them all, also for capturing the Milky Way with a lens. Beau and I have been doing that very thing for years. Several powerful solar flares occurred last week, and the auroras generated by the resulting geomagnetic storms were absolutely breathtaking for a night or two. They lit up the sky and made us feel like dancing too.
Years ago, my soulmate and I were driving along a country road in the Lanark highlands on a cold winter night when a particularly vivid performance of the aurora took place right over our heads. We stopped to watch it, and I have never forgotten the gently shifting curtain of dancing colour in every hue of the rainbow.
In Scotland, the aurorae are often called "the mirrie dancers" in reference to their shifting, shimmering motion in the night sky. The old Scots word "mirrie" means "to tingle, shimmer, or quiver" and probably originates in the Norn language, a descendent of Old Norse spoken in the Orkney and Shetland islands until the middle of the 19th century. The further north one travels, the more dazzling the auroras are, and the northern Scottish islands get some whoppers. Merry (not mirrie) is a modern mispronunciation of the old adjective, and I like that too. We need all the merriment we can get in this dark time of the year.
There is also another Scots term for the aurora, "Na Fir-chlis" (the Nimble Men"). According to folklore, the nimble ones are combative, outcast faeries who wage a never-ending battle in the night skies above the earth. From down here on the surface, their war games look like dancing lights.
While the most spectacular aurora showings are in places like northern Scotland, Iceland, Finland, Norway, Greenland and Canada's high Arctic, there are times when we don't do too badly in the eastern Ontario highlands either. We call them "the northern lights", and they certainly put on a show last week.
There is nothing like sky dancers, folklore and etymology to start off a dreary November day. Ditto a good cup of coffee. Winter is here, no doubt about it.









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